Scottish Association of Professional Homoeopaths (SAPH)

Homoeopathy

"The highest ideal of cure is the rapid, gentle and permanent restoration of health; that is, the lifting and annihilation of the disease in its entire extent in the shortest, most reliable, and least disadvantageous way, according to clearly realizable principles."

(Organon of the Medical Art, by Samuel Hahnemann, edited WB O'Reilly)

That was written around 1796, but it applies just as forcibly today. The extent of iatrogenic or medicine-caused disease nowadays is appalling. For all the random-controlled-testing and double-blind placebo controlled trials of modern drugs before they reach the market, we still get horrifying stories of harm done to patients by these medications, evidenced by huge medical bills incurred by pharmaceutical companies through court cases brought by the injured.

For all the effort, modern pharmacy appears to have overlooked the maxim "First Do No Harm".

The record of homoeopathic medicine is rather different. In over 200 years of intensive use in many parts of the world by millions of people, there are almost no cases of homoeopathic medicine-caused harm.

That does not mean that nothing happens! Patients may undergo a phase during their homoeopathic treatment when some of their symptoms appear to get worse, or to return for a while. The point is that this happens along a path which, "according to clearly realizable principles" (see above) can be understood by the practising homoeopath.

What are the origins of Homoeopathy?

Here is what Jeremy Laurence, writing in the Independent on 26/2/10 wrote:

"The origins of the treatment lie in the dissatisfaction that the young Dr Hahnemann, a German physician who practised in the late 18th century, felt with the orthodox medicine of the time.

His distaste for the then favoured treatments "blood-letting, purging and burning and the administration of toxic substances such as arsenic and mercury" was not difficult to understand and it led him to devote his energy to his "beloved chemistry".

One of his earliest experiments involved the drug quinine, used to treat malaria. He had read that it was effective because it was bitter and astringent, but realised that, if this were the case, all bitter and astringent substances would be effective, which they clearly were not.

By testing it on himself he discovered that it produced symptoms of fever similar to those produced by the disease itself and he speculated that this could be the real secret of its curative power.

He began to test other drugs on himself, his family and friends, such as belladonna, camphor and aconitum to study the symptoms they produced. But it was not until 1796 that he "first communicated to the world by means of public print his new discovery in medicine".

Today it flourishes as one of the leading branches of complementary medicine, with millions of adherents across the world. Walk into any high street chemist and in the complementary medicine section you will find arnica, nux vomica, pulsatilla and rhus tox on the shelves. The Queen, David Beckham and Geri Halliwell are among those said to swear by them."

How do homoeopathic medicines - 'remedies' - work?

Actually, we don't know, though there is much speculation. But should that be the cause of all the criticism? Modern medicine has only recently discovered how aspirin works, yet it didn't stop doctors prescribing it for hundreds of years. The steam engine - first patented in 1698 - was in excellent use long before any of the laws of thermodynamics were formulated by Sadi Carnot in 1824. Fairly soon we shall have quantum computers, yet we don't fully understand quantum mechanics.